There was though, one aspect of Mary's story, a particularly toxic relationship, which fascinated me above all. As you might imagine, many aspects of it resonated strongly with modern life. It was full of crises and high-flown emotions – passion, jealousy, grief and hate. Her life was operatic – perhaps more like a soap opera! There were more scandals, deaths, tortured relationships, loves and losses than in several seasons of Desperate Housewives. She was a teenage rebel, a grieving mother, a determined author, and a long-suffering lover of a man with ideas well ahead of his time. She was a strong but vulnerable woman living in an unsympathetic society, and most of what she did was controversial. When I started to research beyond those well-known aspects of her life, I found a complex story. Mary Shelley's real demon: A guest essay by Suzann.Mystery: “Whodunit” or “Whom do you seek”? A gues.Book review: Bittersweet, by Colleen McCullough.Book review: The Tiger Queens, by Stephanie Thornton.Portrait of a Girl by Dörthe Binkert, a historical.Rainbows on the Moon by Barbara Wood, a lively jou.A long-sought historical novel about a Princess of. The Lodger by Louisa Treger, a journey into the mi.The Barefoot Queen by Ildefonso Falcones, a dark p.Book review: A Day of Fire: A Novel of Pompeii.
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